If one looks at the many query_formats callbacks in existence,
one will immediately recognize that there is one type of default
callback for video and a slightly different default callback for
audio: It is "return ff_set_common_formats_from_list(ctx, pix_fmts);"
for video with a filter-specific pix_fmts list. For audio, it is
the same with a filter-specific sample_fmts list together with
ff_set_common_all_samplerates() and ff_set_common_all_channel_counts().
This commit allows to remove the boilerplate query_formats callbacks
by replacing said callback with a union consisting the old callback
and pointers for pixel and sample format arrays. For the not uncommon
case in which these lists only contain a single entry (besides the
sentinel) enum AVPixelFormat and enum AVSampleFormat fields are also
added to the union to store them directly in the AVFilter,
thereby avoiding a relocation.
The state of said union will be contained in a new, dedicated AVFilter
field (the nb_inputs and nb_outputs fields have been shrunk to uint8_t
in order to create a hole for this new field; this is no problem, as
the maximum of all the nb_inputs is four; for nb_outputs it is only
two).
The state's default value coincides with the earlier default of
query_formats being unset, namely that the filter accepts all formats
(and also sample rates and channel counts/layouts for audio)
provided that these properties agree coincide for all inputs and
outputs.
By using different union members for audio and video filters
the type-unsafety of using the same functions for audio and video
lists will furthermore be more confined to formats.c than before.
When the new fields are used, they will also avoid allocations:
Currently something nearly equivalent to ff_default_query_formats()
is called after every successful call to a query_formats callback;
yet in the common case that the newly allocated AVFilterFormats
are not used at all (namely if there are no free links) these newly
allocated AVFilterFormats are freed again without ever being used.
Filters no longer using the callback will not exhibit this any more.
Reviewed-by: Paul B Mahol <onemda@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Nicolas George <george@nsup.org>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
Up until now, an AVFilter's lists of input and output AVFilterPads
were terminated by a sentinel and the only way to get the length
of these lists was by using avfilter_pad_count(). This has two
drawbacks: first, sizeof(AVFilterPad) is not negligible
(i.e. 64B on 64bit systems); second, getting the size involves
a function call instead of just reading the data.
This commit therefore changes this. The sentinels are removed and new
private fields nb_inputs and nb_outputs are added to AVFilter that
contain the number of elements of the respective AVFilterPad array.
Given that AVFilter.(in|out)puts are the only arrays of zero-terminated
AVFilterPads an API user has access to (AVFilterContext.(in|out)put_pads
are not zero-terminated and they already have a size field) the argument
to avfilter_pad_count() is always one of these lists, so it just has to
find the filter the list belongs to and read said number. This is slower
than before, but a replacement function that just reads the internal numbers
that users are expected to switch to will be added soon; and furthermore,
avfilter_pad_count() is probably never called in hot loops anyway.
This saves about 49KiB from the binary; notice that these sentinels are
not in .bss despite being zeroed: they are in .data.rel.ro due to the
non-sentinels.
Reviewed-by: Nicolas George <george@nsup.org>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
Several combinations of functions happen quite often in query_format
functions; e.g. ff_set_common_formats(ctx, ff_make_format_list(sample_fmts))
is very common. This commit therefore adds functions that are equivalent
to commonly used function combinations in order to reduce code
duplication.
Reviewed-by: Nicolas George <george@nsup.org>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
This is possible now that the next-API is gone.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
Currently, the zoompan filter exposes a 'time' variable (missing from docs) for use in
the 'zoom', 'x', and 'y' expressions. This variable is perhaps better named
'out_time' as it represents the timestamp in seconds of each output frame
produced by zoompan. This patch adds aliases 'out_time' and 'ot' for 'time'.
This patch also adds an 'in_time' (alias 'it') variable that provides access
to the timestamp in seconds of each input frame to the zoompan filter.
This helps to design zoompan filters that depend on the input video timestamps.
For example, it makes it easy to zoom in instantly for only some portion of a video.
Both the 'out_time' and 'in_time' variables have been added in the documentation
for zoompan.
Example usage of 'in_time' in the zoompan filter to zoom in 2x for the
first second of the input video and 1x for the rest:
zoompan=z='if(between(in_time,0,1),2,1):d=1'
V2: Fix zoompan filter documentation stating that the time variable
would be NAN if the input timestamp is unknown.
V3: Add 'it' alias for 'in_time. Add 'out_time' and 'ot' aliases for 'time'.
Minor corrections to zoompan docs.
Signed-off-by: exwm <thighsman@protonmail.com>
AVFilterLink.frame_count is supposed to count the number of frames
that were passed on the link, but with min_samples, that number is
not always the same for the source and destination filters.
With the addition of a FIFO on the link, the difference will become
more significant.
Split the variable in two: frame_count_in counts the number of
frames that entered the link, frame_count_out counts the number
of frames that were sent to the destination filter.
Fixes: CID1351392
Fixes: CID1351393
Fixes: CID1351395
Reviewed-by: Paul B Mahol <onemda@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Libav, for some reason, merged this as a public API function. This will
aid in future merges.
A define is left for backwards compat, just in case some person
used it, since it is in a public header.
Signed-off-by: Derek Buitenhuis <derek.buitenhuis@gmail.com>